Grid Outages Are History With This Texan Innovation

In a world rushing to customize everything, one Texas company is doing the opposite: it’s standardizing its products in order to offer customers a cheap solution to their power security worries.

Texas Microgrids, the child of local firm Enchanted Rock and Balfour Beatty Infrastructure Partners, which came into being last month, will install over 50 MW gas-fueled microgrids at 45 locations in greater Houston. And that’s just the start.

Microgrids are nothing new, but the latest Microgrids will be different, the company says.

According to him and his co-founder, aerospace engineer Clark Thompson, the clients they are targeting with their new microgrids are not looking for custom-made solutions. They are looking for affordable reliability, hence the drive towards standardization.

The idea of offering microgrids-as-a-service is the novel element in this project. Texas Microgrids will offer its systems in exchange for an upfront payment, and will generate revenues from selling the power they generate when not in use by the client on the local energy market. The microgrid remains its property for the duration of the contract, between 10 and 15 years. Related: Billionaire Investors Back A Gold Price Rally In 2016

This is an amazingly simple offering, guaranteeing to keep the lights on in case of a central grid outage. Still, ERock doesn’t entirely shun customization. On the contrary, it’s ready to add solar and storage, as well as any other relevant service to the microgrid should a client decide they want it.

The MaaS idea will be turned into a reality in less than a year, after relevant permits and interconnections are obtained, the co-founders told Greentech Media. The installation itself only requires as little as a fortnight.

ERock has been in the business of making power distribution systems since 2006, so why did it take them so long to come up with this low-cost and certainly attractive idea? Because gas-powered generators were not reliable enough to satisfy ERock’s clients’ needs. Reliability, says McAndrew, is not just about having a backup generator when the central grid is down. The microgrid also works in times of normal power supply and has to work reliably. Recently, however, generator manufacturers have improved their products, so gas-powered generators have become a viable alternative to the high-cost CHP and diesel-powered generators. Related: The Oil Futures Market Tells Us The Glut Is Over

ERock is very optimistic for the future. It has an extensive pipeline and is eyeing expansion beyond the state line. Unlike its competitors, which typically offer solar plus storage plus backup “behind the meter” packages in the microgrid segment, McAndrew and Thompson say that theirs are real microgrids that can operate either in synchronization with the central grid or on their own when the need arises. Throw in the much smaller cost for installation and connection, and the future starts indeed looking quite rosy for Texas Microgrids.